The Text: PBS’s Frontline had a terrific show last night called the “Untouchables” and was another report on the fact that not one single Wall Street bank or executive has been criminally prosecuted for any conduct related to the largest financial collapse since the Great Crash of 1929. Watch the show here.

While that’s bad enough, what’s worse is watching the most senior so-called law enforcement officials in our country offer one pathetic excuse after another for why they have so grossly failed to do their job. To non-lawyers or non-professionals, these excuses may seem reasonable or plausible, but frankly none of them withstand the simplest scrutiny. That is why none of those senior officials will subject themselves to a public debate or “unfriendly” audience where real questions — and follow-up questions — are asked and they aren’t allowed to spin or squirm their way out of answering.

The show’s exclusive focus was on criminal prosecution, but the track record of the SEC is even worse in some ways. The SEC pretends to enforce the law on Wall Street with puny slap-on-the-wrist fines (that the biggest banks get to pay with shareholders money and insurance policies) that misleads the public into believing that the SEC is doing their job, while signaling to Wall Street that they have nothing to worry about. Indeed, the SEC has given Wall Street a road map to avoid future liability for their senior executives. As we have detailed, “SEC Enforcement Has Incentivized, Rewarded and Guaranteed More Wall Street Crime.”

The American people are not stupid. They see the double standard. They know that there are two sets of laws in the country: one for the rich, powerful and well connected of Wall Street and one for everyone else on Main Street. In fact, a jury explicitly told the SEC just that when they rejected the attempted scapegoating of a minnow while letting the whales of Wall Street get off.

Too bad the show didn’t also rip the cover off the SEC’s pathetic history of repeated sweetheart settlements with their Wall Street buddies. It would have provided even more concrete examples of repeated, knowing wrongdoing by Wall Street banks and executives and show how they were — again — let off the hook, as detailed here.

Contrary to the smooth-sounding, but ignorant comments of the head of DOJ’s criminal division to Frontline’s award-winning producer Marty Smith, demanding such prosecutions and accountability isn’t vindictive or mob-rule. Equal justice before the law is the bedrock of democracy. Two sets of rules is corrosive, not only of democracy and our judicial system, but also of the social glue the binds us all to the rules that are essential for our entire government and society to work. That is what is really at stake when everyone in America gets to see that the rich, powerful, well-connected of Wall Street pillage our country, crash the financial system and cause the worst economy since the Great Depression.

After all that, the select handful of rich and powerful not only all walk away scot-free, but they get to do so with their pockets stuffed with — literally — billions of dollars. As Frontline so clearly showed, the minnows of Main Street are prosecuted and thrown in prison for years while the party on Wall Street continues.

Making matters worse, the total failure of any accountability much less punishment will almost assuredly cause such recklessness to happen again, and probably soon. After all, if there’s no punishment and they get to keep their executive suites, social status, billions in bonuses, mansions around the world, yachts bigger than the average American home, fleet of planes and everything else they believe are most important thing in the world, why wouldn’t they do it all again?

‘Mr Ronson reports: “Justice departments and parole boards all over the world have accepted Hare’s contention that psychopaths are quite simply incurable and everyone should concentrate their energies instead on learning how to root them out.”

But, far from being rooted out, they are still in place and often in positions of even greater power.

As Mr Boddy warns: “The very same corporate psychopaths, who probably caused the crisis by their self-seeking greed and avarice, are now advising governments on how to get out of the crisis. Further, if the corporate psychopaths theory of the global financial crisis is correct, then we are now far from the end of the crisis. Indeed, it is only the end of the beginning.”

I became familiar with psychopaths early in life. They were the hard men who terrorised south-east London when I was growing up. People like “Mad” Frankie Fraser and the Richardson brothers. They were what we used to call “red haze” men, and they were frightening because they attacked with neither fear, mercy nor remorse.’

The great lie is to believe that people like those don’t exist. Some fellows just don’t care, while the moral majority are their servility service.